Litcius/Paper detail

Methods for crosslinking and stabilization of chitosan structures for potential medical applications

Anna Woźniak, Monika Biernat

2022Journal of Bioactive and Compatible Polymers42 citationsDOI

Abstract

Chitosan is a well-known polymer widely used in tissue engineering and regenerative medicine. It is biocompatible, biodegradable, non-toxic, has antibacterial and osteoconductive properties. Chitosan is often used in the form of composites (with the participation of ceramic particles), membranes, hydrogels or nanoparticles. The problem with biomaterials is their low durability, rapid degradation, poor mechanical properties and cytotoxicity. Cross-linking or stabilization of such materials allows for solving these problems. It is important that the compounds used for this purpose exhibit limited or no toxicity. The presented article is a review and presents some methods of cross-linking/stabilization of chitosan structures. The analysis concerns low or non-cytotoxic cross-linking/stabilization methods. The discussed compounds used for the purpose of chitosan structure fixation are: cinnamaldehyde, genipin, L-aspartic acid, vanillin, sodium carbonate, sodium alginate, BGP, ethanol and TPP. There is discussed also a hydrothermal/dehydrothermal method which seems to be promising as it is more advantageous since no additional compounds are introduced into the structure.

Topics & Concepts

ChitosanGenipinSelf-healing hydrogelsBiocompatibilityPolymerChemistryBiocompatible materialChitinMaterials scienceChemical engineeringNanotechnologyPolymer chemistryOrganic chemistryBiomedical engineeringEngineeringMedicineHydrogels: synthesis, properties, applicationsAdvanced Drug Delivery SystemsNanocomposite Films for Food Packaging